Dave Arnold

Founder & President of the Museum of Food & Drink

Half Master Chef, Half Mixologist, Half Mad Scientist

In 2004, Arnold started working on plans for MOFAD, a museum to promote learning about the culture, history, science, commerce, and production of food and drink.

In 2005, Arnold was tapped to create and head the first-of-its-kind Culinary Technology department at the French Culinary Institute, now part of the International Culinary Center, in New York City. At the FCI, Arnold taught classes on food technology to culinary students and wrote about his experiments from home-style centrifuges to futuristic cocktails on his blog. Cooking Issues grew into a radio show, where listeners ask Dave questions about food science and technology, unusual ingredients and cooking techniques, culinary culture, and kitchen myths. The show is hosted by Heritage Radio Network, which broadcasts from the back of Roberta’s restaurant in Brooklyn, NY every Tuesday at noon.

In 2011, Arnold paired with Momofuku chef David Chang to form what began as an innovative cooking equipment supplier for restaurants and home cooks and morphed into a high-tech cocktail bar.[5] Booker and Dax, named after Arnold’s two sons, consists of a food innovation laboratory in the Lower East Side and a popular bar attached to the Momofuku Ssäm Bar in the East Village.

In 2013, Arnold’s Museum of Food and Drink (MOFAD) made its public debut with a successful Kickstarter campaign that raised over $100,000 for MOFAD’s first exhibition: BOOM! The Puffing Gun and the Rise of Breakfast Cereal. The exhibit, which features a functioning, 3,200-pound puffing gun that was once widely used to produce breakfast cereal, debuted at New York City’s Summer Streets festival on August 17, 2013. The New Yorker described MOFAD’s puffing gun as “a mid-century relic that embodies, in profound ways, the industrialization and commercialization of American food.”[6]

In addition to his work at Booker and Dax and MOFAD, Arnold has a two-book publishing deal with Norton on his work with experimental mixology and related projects. The first book he wrote for Norton, Liquid Intelligence: The Art and Science of the Perfect Cocktail, was published on November 10, 2014.[1] He lives in the Lower East Side of Manhattan with his wife and two sons.